A Frizzle is not a breed it is simply a feather , just like some people have curly hair , some have straight . If your frizzle is a bantam then your eggs will be small. If it is a true bantam ( meaning it has no large form ) it will be tiny , If it is standard size fowl then your eggs will be normal and if your bird is gentle giant ( such as a jersey giant ) then it will be over sized ......
Approximately 150 eggs a year
The diet of the frizzle chicken is just like any other egg laying breed. They can eat chicken feed, vegetable scraps, and worms just like any other chicken. Their fancy plumage does not change their diet.
Any chicken can. I have two leghorns, one lays teardrop shaped eggs, and the other one lays ostrich eggs!!!! (Not literally. But you get the picture.) But some breeds are bred to lay huge eggs. Bull*hit! hormones.. natural chicken lay 1/2 the size of eggs u see in the supermarket, u just happened to come across bigger egggs treated with more hormones, go to an organic strore and believe me.
No. A chicken is a bird. No marsupial lays eggs.
yes frizzle bantams are purebred chickens.
A frizzle is a breed of chicken. It is a mix between a silkie and a cochin.
roosters
Approximately 150 eggs a year
Polish frizzle chicken is a rare breed of chickens. You will have to search some internet sites that specialize in rare breeds. Cackle Hatchery is one.
The diet of the frizzle chicken is just like any other egg laying breed. They can eat chicken feed, vegetable scraps, and worms just like any other chicken. Their fancy plumage does not change their diet.
Laughing kookaburras' eggs and the Blue-winged kookaburras' eggs are about 46mm x 35 mm, or the size of a chicken's egg. The Spangled kookaburra, a smaller species, lays eggs around the size of a bantam chicken's eggs.
i have been told that the silkie crossed with a frizzle is a new breed of chicken called a sizzle.I myself am breeding for these birds as of this year...
They feel the same as chicken eggs or goose eggs or bird eggs or ostrich eggs or anything, only they're the same size as a chicken egg.
As with any quantitative question about organic matter, the answer would depend on the size of the egg in question. Not all ostrich eggs are the same size. The same goes for chicken eggs. In general, an ostrich egg would equal about 2 dozen large chicken eggs.1 ostrich egg = 24 chicken eggs (approx.)24 chicken eggs
seagull's eggs are about the size of an average chicken egg to 2x the size.
Any chicken can. I have two leghorns, one lays teardrop shaped eggs, and the other one lays ostrich eggs!!!! (Not literally. But you get the picture.) But some breeds are bred to lay huge eggs. Bull*hit! hormones.. natural chicken lay 1/2 the size of eggs u see in the supermarket, u just happened to come across bigger egggs treated with more hormones, go to an organic strore and believe me.
Yes, although size (of the eggs VS chicken) could be a problem with not being able to warm them enough.